Subject: Haiti, Despised by All: by Eduardo Galeano
World Press Review
December 1996
The Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano has written several books denouncing
foreign intervention in Latin America. Decidedly to the left, his views have
a large following among Latin American intellectuals. Haiti is the country
that is treated the worst by the world's powerful. Bankers humiliate it.
Merchants ignore it. And politicians slam their doors in its face.
Democracy arrived only recently in Haiti. During its short life, this
frail, hungry creature received nothing but abuse. It was murdered in its
infancy in 1991 in a coup led by General Raoul Cedras.
Three years later, democracy returned. After having installed and deposed
countless military dictators, the U.S. backed President Jean Bertrand
Aristide-the first leader elected by popular vote in Haiti's history-and a
man foolish enough to want a country with less injustice.
In order to erase every trace of American participation in the bloody
Cedras dictatorship, U.S. soldiers removed 160,000 pages of records from the
secret archives. Aristide returned to Haiti with his hands tied. He was
permitted to take office as president, but not power. His successor, Rene
Preval, who became president in February, received nearly 90 percent of the
vote.
Any minor bureaucrat at the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund
has more power than Preval does. Every time he asks for a credit line to
feed the hungry, educate the illiterate, or provide land to the peasants, he
gets no response. Or he may be told to go back and learn his lessons. And
because the Haitian government cannot seem to grasp that it must dismantle
its few remaining public services, the last shred of a safety net for the
most defenseless people on Earth, its masters give up on it.
The U.S. invaded Haiti in 1915 and ran the country until 1934. It
withdrew when it had accomplished its two objectives: seeing that Haiti had
paid its debts to U.S. banks and that the constitution was amended to allow
for the sale of plantations to foreigners. Robert Lansing, then secretary of
state, justified the long and harsh military occupation by saying that
blacks were incapable of self-government, that they had "an inherent
tendency toward savagery and a physical in ability to live a civilized
life."
Haiti had been the jewel in the crown, France's richest colony: one big
sugar plantation, harvested by slave labor. The French philosopher
Montesquieu explained it bluntly: "Sugar would be too expensive if it were
not produced by slaves. These slaves are blacks .... it is not possible that
God, who is a very wise being, would have put a soul . .., in such an
utterly black body." Instead, God had put a whip in the overseer's hand.
In l903, the black citizens of Haiti gave Napoleon Bonaparte's troops a
tremendous beating, and Europe has never for given them for this humiliation
inflicted upon the white race. Haiti was the first free country in South
America or the Caribbean. The free people raised their flag over a country
in ruins. The land of Haiti had been devastated by the sugar monoculture and
then laid waste by the war against France. One third of the population had
fallen in combat. Then Europe began its blockade. The newborn nation was
condemned to solitude. No one would buy from it, no one would sell to it,
nor would any nation recognize it.
Not even Simon Bolivar had the courage to establish diploma tic relations
with the black nation. Bolivar was able to reopen his campaign for the
liberation of the Americas, after being defeated by Spain, thanks to help
from Haiti. The Haitian government sup plied him with seven ships, arms, and
soldiers, setting only one condition: that he free the slaves-something that
had not occurred to him. Bolivar kept his promise, but after his victory, he
turned his back on the nation that had saved him. When he convened a meeting
in Panama of the American nations, he invited England, but not Haiti.
The U.S. did not recognize Haiti until 70 years later. By then, Haiti was
already in the bloody hands of the military dictators, who devoted the
meager resources of this starving nation toward relieving its debt to
France. Europe demanded that Haiti pay France a huge indemnity to atone for
its crime against French dignity.
The history of the abuse of Haiti, which in our lifetime has become a
tragedy, is also the story of Western civilization's racism.
--Eduardo Galeano, Inter Press Service
(Third World-oriented news agency),
Rome, Sept. 4,1996.